The main and key ideas of Yerznkatsi's prose found their emotional expression in his verse. They are secular and religious works - verses, canticles, lamentations, melodies, philosophical and semasiological quatrains. His verse works develop in three main directions - religious, scientific and secular. Religious works, although at first glance they seem like ordinary poems with only a biblical theme, in reality they also reveal the wavering of the human mind, the multicolor of feelings, the great love of life and nature. The philosophical perception of life is deep in the secular quarters of Yerznkatsi. Here is man with his uncertain existence, thoughts occupying and tormenting the soul, with the anxiety of death, but also with love and longing to live, with a thirst for wisdom. Secular works are also advices for learning, science, moral education of family and everyday life and virtue. These serve the same purpose: to educate, enlighten the nation, cleanse the society of vices, eliminate the causes of evil: ignorance, illiteracy and bad manners. The admonitions are addressed to almost all classes of society, poor or rich, servant or prince, young, old or child. The verses that are a praise of science complete the thoughts of the thinking and philosophizing poet. Giving scientific explanations about nature and man, again evoking love and interest in learning and knowledge, Yerznkatsi notes that everything is transitory, temporary, has a beginning and an end, while wisdom is permanent and an inexhaustible source of enjoying the good of the world. Expanding the boundaries of the admonitive verse, which gained a large volume in the
Middle Ages, Yerznkatsi creates a new type of lyricism: a phylosophical, semantic poem, which, receiving a special size and content, reaches its perfection in the form of quatrains. These
hayrens, deeply expressing the love of life and the tragedy of death, occupy a special and valuable place in Yerznkatsi's verse. These are not the direct description of the beauties of reality and nature or his impressions and feelings, but thoughts, emotions and judgments arising from them with appropriate philosophical generalizations. Yerznkatsi pays special attention to the purity, simplicity and beauty of the language. Whether
old Armenian or
modern Armenian, his language is beautiful and refined, elegant and simple, rich and understandable, alive and musical, and always poetic. == References ==